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Intro

The document discusses IP Telephony and VoIP. It provides information about an IP Telephony course including instructor details, textbook, requirements, and course outline. It also covers topics like VoIP challenges, speech coding techniques, network reliability, and VoIP implementations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views22 pages

Intro

The document discusses IP Telephony and VoIP. It provides information about an IP Telephony course including instructor details, textbook, requirements, and course outline. It also covers topics like VoIP challenges, speech coding techniques, network reliability, and VoIP implementations.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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IP Telephony

„ Instructor
„ Ai-Chun Pang, [email protected]
„ Office Number: 417
„ Textbook
„ “Carrier Grade Voice over IP,” D. Collins, McGraw-Hill,
Second Edition, 2003.
„ Requirements
„ Homework x 3 30%
„ One mid-term exam (5/14) 40%
„ One term project (proposal: 5/7) 30%
„ Presentation ([5/28], 6/11 and 6/18), Demo (6/18)
„ TAs (office number: 213)
„ 黃宇傑, [email protected]
„ 劉志孝, [email protected]
„ Course Outline
„ Introduction
„ Transporting Voice by Using IP (Real-time Transport
Protocol - RTP)
„ Speech-Coding Techniques
„ H.323
„ Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) and ENUM
„ Media Gateway Control and the Softswitch Architecture
„ VoIP and SS7
„ Quality of Service
„ Designing a Voice over IP Network
„ Mobile IPv4, IPv6 and Micro-mobility
„ Wireless All IP Network
„ Mobile Number Portability
Introduction

Chapter 1
Carrier Grade VoIP
„ Carrier grade and VoIP
„ mutually exclusive
„ A serious alternative for voice communications with enhanced
features
„ Carrier grade
„ The last time when it fails
„ 99.999% reliability (high reliability)
„ Fully redundant, Self-healing
„ AT&T carries about 300 million voice calls a day (high capacity).
„ Highly scalable
„ Short call setup time, high speech quality
„ No perceptible echo, noticeable delay and annoying noises on the
line

IP Telephony 5
VoIP

„ Transport voice traffic using the Internet


Protocol (IP)
„ One of the greatest challenges to VoIP is
voice quality.
„ One of the keys to acceptable voice quality is
bandwidth.
„ Control and prioritize the access
„ Internet: best-effort transfer
„ VoIP != Internet telephony
„ The next generation Telcos
„ Access and bandwidth are better managed.

IP Telephony 6
IP

„ A packet-based protocol
„ Routing on a packet-by-packet base
„ Packet transfer with no guarantees
„ May not receive in order
„ May be lost or severely delayed
„ TCP/IP
„ Retransmission
„ Assemble the packets in order
„ Congestion control
„ Useful for file-transfers and e-mail

IP Telephony 7
Data and Voice

„ Data traffic
„ Asynchronous – can be delayed
„ Extremely error sensitive
„ Voice traffic
„ Synchronous – the stringent delay requirements
„ More tolerant for errors
„ IP is not for voice delivery.
„ VoIP must
„ Meet all the requirements for traditional telephony
„ Offer new and attractive capabilities at a lower cost

IP Telephony 8
Why VoIP?

„ Why carry voice?


„ Internet supports instant access to anything
„ However, voice services provide more revenues.
„ Voice is still the killer application.
„ Why use IP for voice?
„ Traditional telephony carriers use circuit switching
for carrying voice traffic.
„ Circuit-switching is not suitable for multimedia
communications.
„ IP: lower equipment cost, integration of voice and
data applications, potentially lower bandwidth
requirements, the widespread availability of IP
IP Telephony 9
Lower Equipment Cost

„ PSTN switch
„ Proprietary – hardware, OS, applications
„ High operation and management cost
„ Training, support and feature development cost
„ Mainframe computer
„ The IP world
„ Standard hardware and mass-produced
„ Application software is quite separate
„ A horizontal business model
„ More open and competition-friendly
„ IN
„ does not match the openness and flexibility of IP.
„ A few highly successful services
IP Telephony 10
Voice/Data Integration

„ Click-to-talk application
„ Personal communication
„ E-commerce
„ Web collaboration
„ Shop on-line with a fried at another location
„ Video conferencing
„ IP-based PBX
„ IP-based call centers
„ IP-based voice mail

IP Telephony 11
Lower Bandwidth Requirements
„ PSTN
„ G.711 - 64 kbps
„ Human speech frequency < 4K Hz
„ The Nyquist Theorem: 8000 samples per second
„ 8K * 8 bits
„ Sophisticated coders
„ 32kbps, 16kbps, 8kbps, 6.3kbps, 5.3kbps
„ GSM – 13kbps
„ Save more bandwidth by silence-detection
„ Traditional telephony networks can use coders,
too.
„ But it is more difficult.
„ VoIP – two ends of the call negotiate the coding
scheme
IP Telephony 12
The Widespread Availability of IP

„ IP
„ LANs and WANs
„ Dial-up Internet access
„ The ubiquitous presence
„ VoFR or VoATM
„ Only for the backbone of the carriers

IP Telephony 13
VoIP Challenges

„ VoIP must offer the same reliability and voice


quality as PSTN.
„ Mean Opinion Score (MOS)
„ 5 (Excellent), 4 (Good), 3 (Fair), 2 (Poor), 1 (Bad)
„ International Telecommunication Union
Telecommunications Standardization Sector (ITU-
T) P.800
„ Toll quality means a MOS of 4.0 or better.

IP Telephony 14
Speech Quality
„ Must be as good as PSTN
„ Delay
„ The round-trip delay
„ Coding/Decoding + Buffering Time + Tx. Time
„ G.114 < 300 ms
„ Jitter
„ Delay variation
„ Different routes or queuing times
„ Adjusting to the jitter is difficult
„ Jitter buffers add delay

IP Telephony 15
Speech Quality
„ Echo
„ High Delay ===> Echo is Critical
„ Packet Loss
„ Traditional retransmission cannot meet the
real-time requirements
„ Call Set-up Time
„ Address Translation
„ Directory Access

IP Telephony 16
Managing Access and Prioritizing Traffic

„ A single network for a wide range of


applications
„ Call is admitted if sufficient resources are
available
„ Different types of traffic are handled in different
ways
„ If a network becomes heavily loaded, e-mail traffic
should feel the effects before synchronous traffic
(such as voice).
„ QoS has required huge efforts

IP Telephony 17
Speech-coding Techniques

„ In general, coding techniques are such that


speech quality degrades as bandwidth reduces.
„ The relationship is not linear.
„ G.711 64kbps 4.3
„ G.726 32kbps 4.0
„ G.723 (celp) 6.3kbps 3.8
„ G.728 16kbps 3.9
„ G.729 8kbps 4.0
„ GSM 13kbps 3.7

IP Telephony 18
Network Reliability and Scalability

„ PSTN system fails


„ 99.999% reliability
„ Today’s VoIP solutions
„ Redundancy and load sharing
„ Scalable – easy to start on a small scale and then
expand as traffic demand increases

IP Telephony 19
VoIP Implementations

„ IP-based PBX solutions


„ A single network
„ Enhanced services

IP Telephony 20
VoIP Implementations

„ IP voice mail
„ One of the easiest
applications
„ IP call centers CTI
Server
„ Use the caller ID Internet

„ Automatic call distribution


„ Load the customer’s
information on the agent’s
desktop PBX/ACD ITG Web Server
Call Center
„ Click to talk

IP Telephony 21
VoIP Evolution
IP
IP Network
Network
VoIP
VoIP VoIP Terminal
Terminal Terminal Gateway PSTN

1: PC to PC 2: Phone to PC over IP

IP
Network PSTN

Gateway Gateway
Gateway Gateway

PSTN PSTN IP IP
Network Network
VoIP VoIP
Terminal Terminal

3: Phone to Phone over IP 4: PC to PC over PSTN


IP Telephony 22

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